Home » Confusion, denial at border, as path to U.S. asylum shuts down – Jobsmaa.com

Confusion, denial at border, as path to U.S. asylum shuts down – Jobsmaa.com

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Outside the white gates of this Dijuana Customs facility, a staircase for American soil, the migrants sat on the sidewalk this week with peaceful distrust, and their future feels very dark and uncertain.

Like thousands of others last year, they met with US officials and came to the border for formal asylum interviews. Going there refers to the dense and treacherous Daryan gap on the border of Columbia and Panama. Others have traveled to many countries on the bus, and some have gathered in accommodations and local hotels for months in hopes of confirming the request for a mobile processor. CBP is one, The Biden administration has been used since the beginning of 2023 to facilitate the application of asylum seeking asylum.

A young woman hugs a post and she closed her eyes.

Solannge Mursi passes time to wait outside the Customs Office in Dijuana with his parents.

Whatever their trip, they came this week to find out that their meetings were canceled without a notice or cheer.

Shortly after President Trump took office Cancel all asylum appointments. In a separate administrative order, he declared the national emergency as a national emergency.

“Trump has signed up and everything is over,” said Roberto Ganastu, 40, from Guatemala, sitting on a curb across the customs building. After spending more than a month to load the CBP oneE application every day to see if luck will break his way in the lottery-style system, Kanastu has a meeting at 5 am on Tuesday morning. While doing that, he borrowed about $ 9,000 to travel north and came to Dijuana on Sunday the previous Sunday before his meeting.

But on Monday, he could not load the processor on his phone. In a short time, he was informed that all appointments were canceled. He arrived at the gate called El Sapphire on Monday and believed it was false. The Mexican authorities did not respond. On Tuesday, he came back to see if something would change.

Already, the Border Line Criery Center has printed flyers. “Did they cancel your CBP one meeting?” The papers were heard in Spanish and English. The panel provided home, food and information to the required immigrants.

Asylum seekers lean on a white fence outside the Customs Office in Dijuana.

Thousands of asylum seekers this week found that their appointments for interviewing with US officials at the Dijuana Customs were canceled.

On Tuesday, people still lasted out of the customs building, and now don't know what's going on. Some families were astonishing on their luggage. Children, unaware of the crisis faced by their parents, raised toys and played on the fence.

“Look at all these people with their bags and luggage. I brought a bag and hope,” he said Const. He felt to cry. “Inside, I am dying.”

“The only thing we can do is to wait,” he said.

The scene of Dijuana reflected this week at the US-Mexico border. Migrants are trapped in Mexico. They expect their lawyers on both sides of the border to be confused as Trump Orders to mass deportation.

The Mexican officials waiting for the diaspora, they could stay in the car for more than half an hour, but they could not stay at the gate. By Tuesday evening, less than a dozen, less than a dozen will climb into the shelter, while others departed themselves, and some prefer to return the next day.

Children laugh when chasing Pinata, who looks like President Trump.

Children of asylum seekers are chasing Trump Pinata taken by an enthusiast in a local migrant shelter.

CPB One was originally created to prevent passengers' backups entering the country. After downloading it on their phones and including their passport information, foreign nationals, borders and airports can use the app to soften their way through the airports.

In January 2023, the Biden administration expanded the app's use in an attempt to help suppress asylum seekers coming to the southern border. The project helped to plan meetings at the entrance port for asylum seeking 1,450 people a day. In the two years since the launch, the CBP oneE has made it easier for nearly 1 million people's entry. The vast majority were interviewed, and then the notice was issued to appear in the US Immigration Courts for the verdict of their cases.

Rosara Rubio cried about the difficult decision to leave Venezuela, a political activist. He said he had fled the country's instability to provide a better future for his daughters Solannge, 4 and Sofia. He said he tried three months to meet the CBP one processor and was happy when they were finally accepted.

But when he had e -mail that the appointment was canceled at 11:11 am on Monday, all of these were dysfunctional.

“If they implement the plan, they should respect it,” he said. “We are humans.”

The immigrant woman and her husband are crying when dozens of assistant workers offer breakfast to dozens of asylum seekers.

“We came here for something. We believe in God. Something will happen,” says Jesus Korea, here, the picture with his wife Marcela Medina.

Marcela Medina, 57, her husband, Jesus Korea, 61, and their 15 -year -old son believed that their circumstances would change on Wednesday.

Medina was grateful when she embraced a local volunteer who gave hot tea and pan dulls as breakfast to the diaspora. The family from Venezuela claimed that the seven countries were on the bus, fleeing their country's instability and violence.

They spent five months in Mexico, trying to register through the CBP one processor, and received the announcement of the appointment at 5 am on Tuesday, January 2.

Two days ago, they found the road from their hotel to the Customs Office and confirmed that they were the way. On Monday, they saw the migrants returning with evening meetings.

“It's not easy to go here,” said Korea, describing the violence and injuries they had seen in the trek to the north. “We came here for something. We believe in God. Something happens. We have to be ready. We must be here and try.

A woman's shadow is reflected in the tent.

Knowing that all appointments for American asylum seekers have been canceled, asylum seekers are resting in tents at 2000 shelter.

Some lawyers are worried that more migrants can consider illegal illegal, which is often a dangerous act, which happens almost every day on the southwest border. On Wednesday, Manuel, 28, only by the first name, the deported man sat on a table and smoked a cigarette. He carried a red straw bag – some of his belongings – eye drops, his Mexican passport, a cigarette.

Manuel said he tried to jump the border wall on Tuesday night but was caught. He hit his head on the way down. Still, he intended to give it back.

“I have no choice,” he said. “Everything in this life is possible.”

Asylum seekers climb into the van to take it to the shelter.

Asylum seekers are climbing the van to take it to the shelter after waiting for several hours outside the Dijuana Customs Office.

Families with no other housing have returned to non -profit shelters. In the movimiento Juvenud 2000, many families who had canceled their meetings camped in tents set up inside a giant warehouse.

Outside, Sergio Tamai Quintro, an activist from the Angels with Borders, tried to send a message to the US president, Trump beat Pinata with his belt. The children, laughing and playing.

The shelter was less than half, but director Jose Maria Garcia said she felt that it would change soon.

“With this announcement of the new president, there will be mass translations. What does that mean?” Garcia asked, “We are going to cross the exiled Mexicians. They will come from both ends.

Asylum seekers cook food in the midst of tar and tents.

Asylum seekers cook food at Templo embajadores de jesús shelter.

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